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PR 

6001 
S7V6 
1916 


Asquith,  Herbert 

The  volunteer,  and  other 
poems  • 


THE  VOLUNTEER 

AND  OTHER  POEMS 

By 
HERBERT  ASQUITH 


LONDON 

SIDGWICK  &  JACKSON,  LTD. 

3  Adam  Street,  Adelphi 

1916 


One  Shilling  net 


THE   VOLUNTEER 

and  Other  Poems 


THE  VOLUNTEER 

AND  OTHER  POEMS 

By 
HERBERT  ASQUITH 


LONDON 

SIDGWICK  &  JACKSON,  LTD. 

3  Adam  Street,  Adelphi 

1916 


All  rights  reserved 


First  Impression,  December,  1915. 
Second  Impression,  January,  1916. 


PR 


628701 
9 


To 
C.  A. 


For  kind  permission  to  reprint  some  of 
these  verses  my  thanks  are  due  to  the  Editors 
of  the  Spectator  and  the  Pall  Mall  Gazette. 

H.A. 


THE  VOLUNTEER. 

HERE  lies  a  clerk  who  half  his  life  had 
spent 

Toiling  at  ledgers  in  a  city  grey, 
Thinking  that  so  his  days  would  drift  away 
With  no  lance  broken  in  life's  tournament  : 
Yet  ever  'twixt  the  books  and  his  bright  eyes 
The  gleaming  eagles  of  the  legions  came, 
And    horsemen,    charging    under    phantom 

skies, 
Went    thundering    past    beneath    the    ori- 

flamme. 

And  now  those  waiting  dreams  are  satisfied  ; 
From  twilight  to  the  halls  of  dawn  he  went  ; 
His  lance  is  broken  ;  but  he  lies  content 
With  that  high  hour,  in  which  he  lived  and 

died. 

And  falling  thus  he  wants  no  recompense, 
Who  found  his  battle  in  the  last  resort  ; 
Nor  needs  he  any  hearse  to  bear  him  hence, 
Who  goes  to  join  the  men  of  Agincourt. 


THE  WESTERN  LINE. 
FLANDERS,  1915. 

THOR  draws  a  chord  invisible 
Across  the  shaking  sky  : 
I  hear  the  tearing  of  the  shell, 

The  bullets  sing  and  cry, 
As,  charging  through  the  flames  of  hell, 
The  batteries  go  by. 

The  gunners  laugh  about  the  task, 

That  man  to  man  has  given  : 
Like  Titans,  now  the  guns  unmask 

And  fire  the  veils  of  heaven. 
Above  the  cloud  what  lights  are  gleaming  ? 

God's  batteries  are  those, 
Or  souls  of  soldiers  homeward  streaming 

To  banquet  with  their  foes  ? 
The  floods  of  battle  ebb  and  flow, 
The  soldiers  to  Valhalla  go  ! 

They  say  that,  when  the  day  awoke 

And  the  dying  night  was  wan, 
Harry  of  England  rode  the  smoke, 

And  led  the  English  van  : 


8 


And  bowmen  in  the  battle-glare 
Rose  from  the  ghostly  dew  : 

The  clothyard  sang  upon  the  air 
And  the  grey  goose-feather  flew  ! 

Harry  of  England  is  awake, 

His  archers  mind  not  trench  or  stake  ! 

And  men  have  seen  the  Emperor, 

The  Eagle  of  the  South  : 
God  grant  the  bonds  be  loosed  by  Thor 

That  bind  that  marble  mouth  ! 
The  silver  roads  of  conquest  lie 

Fast  frozen  in  his  brow  : 
Would  those  imperious  lips  were  free 

To  give  their  orders  now  ! 
The  floods  of  battle  ebb  and  flow, 
The  soldiers  to  Valhalla  go  ! 

Beyond  the  thunder  of  the  guns, 

Beyond  the  flaming  line, 
Far  from  this  sky  of  echoing  bronze, 

The  English  valleys  shine, 
The  gardens  moated  in  the  wolds 

By  wind  and  water  kissed, 
And  dainty  girls,  that  England  folds 

In  sunshine  and  in  mist. 
The  floods  of  battle  ebb  and  flow, 
The  soldiers  to  Valhalla  go  ! 


The  soldier  has  his  girls  to  love, 

And  he  has  his  rum  to  drink, 
But,  when  the  lines  of  battle  move, 

He  has  little  time  to  think  : 
Sometimes  he  wins  a  victory  ; 

Somewhere  the  battle  ends  ; 
And  there  the  paths  of  glory  lie, 

Where  lie  the  soldier's  friends. 
The  floods  of  battle  ebb  and  flow, 
The  soldiers  to  Valhalla  go  ! 

The  fighting  men  go  charging  past, 

With  the  battle  in  their  eyes, 
The  fighting  men  go  reeling  past, 

Like  gods  in  poor  disguise  : 
The  glorious  men  whom  none  will  see, 

No  wife  or  mother  more, 
Winged  with  the  wings  of  Victory, 

And  helmeted  by  Thor  ! 
Above  the  cloud  what  lights  are  gleaming  ? 

God's  batteries  are  those. 
Or  souls  of  soldiers  homeward  streaming 

To  banquet  with  their  foes  ? 


10 


THE  FALLEN  SUBALTERN. 

THE  starshells  float  above,  the  bayonets 
glisten  ; 

We  bear  our  fallen  friend  without  a  sound  ; 
Below  the  waiting  legions  lie  and  listen 
To    us,   who   march  upon   their    burial- 
ground. 

Wound  in  the  flag  of  England,  here  we  lay 

him  ; 
The  guns  will  flash  and  thunder  o'er  the 

grave  ;  ^ 
What  other  winding  sheet  should  now  array 

him, 
What  other  music  should  salute  the  brave  ? 

As  goes  the  Sun-god  in  his  chariot  glorious, 
When  all  his  golden  banners  are  unfurled, 

So  goes  the  soldier,  fallen  but  victorious, 
And  leaves  behind  a  twilight  in  the  world. 

And  those,  who  come  this  way  in  days  here- 
after, 

Will  know  that  here  a  boy  for  England  fell, 
Who  looked  at  danger  with  the  eyes  of  laugh- 
ter, 

And  on  the  charge  his  days  were  ended 
well. 

II 


One  last   salute ;    the   bayonets   clash,   and 

glisten ; 

With  arms  reversed  we  go  without  a  sound  : 
One  more  has  joined  the  men  who  lie  and 

listen 

To    us,   who    march   upon    their   burial- 
ground. 

1915. 


12 


WAR'S   CATARACT,   1915. 

IN  this  red  havoc  of  the  patient  earth, 
Though  higher  yet  the  tide  of  battle 

rise, 

Now  has  the  hero  cast  away  disguise, 
And  out  of  ruin  splendour  comes  to  birth. 
This  is  the  field  where  Death  and  Honour 

meet, 

And  all  the  lesser  company  are  low  : 
Pale  Loveliness  has  left  her  mirror  now 
And  walks  the  Court  of   Pain  with   silent 

feet. 

From  cliff  to  cliff  War's  cataract  goes  down, 
Hurling  its  booming  waters  to  the  shock ; 
And  tossing  high  their  manes   of  gleaming 

spray 
The   crested    chargers    leap    from    rock   to 

rock, 
While  over  all,   dark  though  the  thunder 

frown, 
The    rainbows    climb    above   to   meet    the 

day. 


TO  A  BABY  FOUND  PADDLING 
NEAR  THE  LINES. 

HAIL  !  O  Baby  of  the  May 
In  the  bubbling  river-bed, 
Playing  where  the  cannon  play, 
With  the  shrapnel  overhead  ! 
Sparkling  in  and  flashing  out 
Through  the  eddies  and  the  shallows, 
With  your  feet  among  the  trout, 
And  your  head  among  the  swallows  ; 
While  the  wag-tails  on  the  daisies 
Lead  you  in  the  minuet, 
Twinkling  through  the  flow'ry  mazes, 
Baby,  do  you  quite  forget 
That,  with  shrapnel  overhead, 
Other  babes  are  put  to  bed  ? 

Baby,  may  the  buttercup, 
When  you  tumble,  pick  you  up  ; 
If  you  fall  beside  the  willow, 
Lilies  rise  to  be  your  pillow  ! 
In  the  winter  should  you  go 
Straying  far  without  a  rest, 
Down  beneath  the  drifting  snow 
May  you  be  the  mouse's  guest ; 


May  the  bull-frog  be  your  Knight, 
And  the  tit  your  templar  true  ! 
May  the  fairy  guide  you  right 
Wandering  through  a  misty  land, 
At  the  crossings  of  the  dew, 
With  the  rainbow  in  her  hand  ! 
Should  you  fall  from  branches  high 
And  go  tumbling  down  the  sky, 
May  the  heron  in  the  air 
Take  you  floating  on  his  wings, 
And  the  cloudlets  be  your  stair, 
Over  palaces  of  Kings  : 
Riding  high  above  the  wold, 
Larks  your  sentinels  shall  be, 
Challenging  with  tongues  of  gold 
Those  who  try  to  cage  the  free  ! 

So,  philosopher  of  May, 
With  my  blessing  go  your  way  ! 
If  you  win  such  friends  as  these 
You  need  never  have  a  care, 
Cannon  you  may  safely  tease, 
And  may  juggle,  at  your  ease, 
With  the  whizzbang  in  the  air  : 
Though  the  world  be  full  of  sadness, 
You  may  still  have  fun  and  gladness, 
And  be  happy  for  a  day, 
Playing  where  the  cannon  play. 


ARES,  GOD  OF  WAR. 

UNDER  the  stars  the  armies  lie  asleep  : 
Between  the  lines  a  quiet  river  flows 
Through  brakes  of  honeysuckle  and  of  rose 
And  fields  where  poppies  droop  in  languor 

deep  : 

The  night  as  with  a  mantle  now  enfolds 
The  muffled  forms  upon  the  pasture  low ; 
The  scent  of  thyme  comes  down  across  the 

wolds, 

And  on  the  roses  of  the  dark  hedgerow 
The  summer  starlight  falls  in  flakes  of  silver 

snow. 

Here  from  the  wooded  haunt  of  nymph  and 

fawn 
The    hidden    guns    peer    forth    across    the 

hills, 

Their  wheels  are  on  the  trampled  daffodils, 
And  so  they  wait  the  coming  of  the  dawn. 
In  dappled  shadows,  where  the  fairy  weaves 
On  grasses  tall  his  web  of  sparkling  lace, 
The    gunners    lie,    their    heads    upon    the 

sheaves : 
White  falls  the  moon  on  many  a  sunburnt 

face, 
That  ere  the  day  shall  feel  another  God's 

embrace. 

16 


Among  the  barrows  of  the  sunken  plain, 
Where  sleep  the  soldiers  of  another  day, 
On  misty  meadow  and  on  upland  gray, 
On  many  eyes  that  close  but  once  again, 
The  peaceful  earth  her  benediction  throws 
In  waves  of  healing  music  from  the  streams, 
That  through  the  willows  softly  comes  and 

goes; 

And  now  the  face  of  all  the  country  seems 
A  mirror  consecrated  to  an  army's  dreams. 

From  far  away  is  borne  a  woman's  pray'r 

To  Ares,  restless  in  his  iron  crown  : 

"  Sleep,  Ares,  sleep !  For,  once  the  dice  are 

thrown, 

Empires  to  thee  are  leaves  upon  the  air  ! 
Ere  all  the  homes  go  smoking  to  the  skies, 
And  men  are  swept  upon  the  battle-blast, 
Ere  all  the  tears    are  wept   from  women's 

eyes, 

O  Queen  of  Love,  hold  now  thy  Lover  fast, 
And  let  him  taste  eternal  anodyne  at  last ! " 

But  with  the  dawn  there  comes  a  soldier's 

song: 
"When  all  the  guns  have  fired  their  last 

salute, 

And  all  the  tongues  of  all  the  world  are  mute, 
And  life  is  dearer  than  to  right  a  wrong, 
17 


Then  may  he  weary  of  his  burning  wine, 
Then  lay  aside  at  last  his  crimson  mail, 
And  rest  for  ever  in  the  arms  divine 
Of  Aphrodite  passionate  and  pale — 
But  hark  !  He  comes  !  Hail,  Ares  !  Lord  of 
thunder,  Hail  !  " 

"  He  rides  above  the  ocean  and  the  snow, 
His  trail  is  on  the  curtain  of  the  skies  : 
Brighter  than  dawn,  his  young  eternal  eyes 
Shine  in  the  eyes  of  Valour  far  below : 
Now  Mammon  hides  beneath  his  trembling 

halls, 

While  Honour  marches  singing  into  war ; 
On    strange    forgotten    hearts    a    radiance 

falls, 

As  ever  nearer,  burning  from  afar, 
The  sword  of  Ares  gleams  above  the  morn- 
ing star." 

"  The  other  gods  are  weaker  ;  thou  alone 
Dost  break  the    King  and   bend    the  Em- 
peror's Knee  : 

Lower  than  unto  Christ  they  bow  to  thee, 
Lord   of    the   Slave,   and   Guardian   of  the 

Free, 

Steel-hearted  Ares,  shaker  of  the  Throne  ; 
Young  God  of  battle,  restless  lover,  hail ! 

18 


For,  once  a  man  has  seen  thine  eyes  aflame, 
And  mounted  on  the  horses  of  the  gale, 
Death  is  a  nothing,  life  an  empty  name  : 
Arise  and  lead  us  ere  our  blood  be  tame, 
O  Lord  of  Thunder,  Ares  of  the  Crimson 
Mail !  " 

January,  1914. 


JEWELS. 
A  YOUNG  MAN  TO  A  MERCHANT. 

OLD  Man,  your  pearls  are  not  for  us, 
Your  rubies  die  too  soon  : 
Have  you  the  pearls  of  Sirius, 
Or  opals  of  the  moon  ? 

I  do  not  ask  for  other  gems  ; 

Flashing  with  frost  and  fire 
The  sky's  undying  diadems 

Shall  be  my  love's  attire. 

Emeralds,  that  into  rubies  melt 

Upon  the  brow  of  night, 
I've  taken  from  Orion's  belt 

To  make  her  girdle  bright. 

On  high  ways  of  the  albatross 

I  scale  the  purple  air 
For  sapphires  of  the  Southern  Cross 

And  wreathe  them  in  her  hair. 

Her  robe  it  is  the  morning  sky, 

Her  veil  it  is  the  West ; 
So  robed,  so  veiled  my  love  will  fly, 

When  I  am  gone  to  rest. 


20 


Yet  all  the  rays  of  all  the  moons, 
The  lights  of  all  the  skies 

Are  pale  beside  the  dim  lagoons 
Of  those  mysterious  eyes. 

Old  Man,  your  pearls  are  not  for  us, 
Your  rubies  die  too  soon  : 

Have  you  the  pearls  of  Sirius, 
Or  opals  of  the  moon  ? 


1913 


21 


VENICE. 

IN  domes  of  dim  and  ancient  gold, 
In  cloisters,  where  the  lightning  plays, 
Where  gleam  the  gorgeous  saints  of  old 

In  aisles  of  jade  and  chrysoprase, 
In  halls  that  wave  like  waving  water, 
Still  moves  the  voice  of  Ocean's  daughter. 

Venice !  What  siren  music  then 

Stirred  on  the  shoals  and  shallow  sea, 

When  that  small  band  of  wandering  men 
First  in  their  dreams  imagined  thee, 

And  hung  that  lyric  splendour  high 

Between  the  water  and  the  sky  ! 

What  Triton  strains  in  other  days 
Were  heard,  when,  on  a  sea  of  flame, 

Thy  battlefleet  swung  through  the  haze, 
And  homeward  hi  her  glory  came, 

Bearing  the  beauty  of  the  East 

To  make  Thy  happy  saint  a  feast. 

Now,  though  that  sceptre-hand  be  cold, 

Those  argent  argosies  no  more 
Their  Tyrian-tinted  wings  unfold 

From  Cyprus  unto  Elsinore ; 
With  broken  sword,  and  banner  furled, 
How  dies  the  Siren  of  the  world  ? 
22 


The  cloud  has  lifted  from  the  stars, 
And  now  again  the  starlight  falls  ; 

Now  Venus  calls  again  to  Mars, 
And  Bacchus  reels  about  his  halls  ; 

And,  lovely  in  a  thousand  forms, 

Our  Lady  drifts  above  the  storms. 

Among  the  moonlit  marble  lace, 
That  wreathes  this  avenue  forlorn, 

Some  God  has  made  his  dwelling  place 
And  takes  his  manna  from  the  morn, 

And  every  young  and  wandering  soul, 

That  passes  here,  must  pay  its  toll. 

Far  off  the  city  fades  away, 

Save  where  one  tow'r  of  rosy  light, 
Like  some  dissolving  shaft  of  day, 

Pierces  the  bosom  of  the  night  : 
The  distant  lightning  breaks  its  shroud 
Valhalla  gleams  beyond  the  cloud. 

Alone  we  float  through  gulfs  remote, 
The  black  canal  no  longer  seen  ; 

My  boat  it  is  a  fairy  boat, 
Above  the  ripple  silver-green, 

Upon  the  wavelet  violet-crowned, 

My  boat  and  I  are  outward  bound  ! 


23 


gy  RUPERT  BROOKE 
POEMS 

(Originally  issued  in    1911) 
Ninth  Impression  2s.   6d.  net 

1914,  AND  OTHER  POEMS 

With  a  Portrait  in  Photogravure 
Tenth  Impression  2s.  6d.  net 

LETTERS  FROM  AMERICA 

With  a  Preface  by  HENRY  JAMES,  and  a 
hitherto  unpublished  Portrait  in  Photogravure 
after  a  Photograph  by  Sherril  Schell.  75.  6d.  net 


LONDON 
SIDGWICK  &  JACKSON,  LTD. 


Printed  by  The  Westminster  Press, 
41  ia    Harrow   Road,    London,     W, 


PR 
6001 
37V6 
1916 


Asquith,  Herbert 

The  volunteer,   and  other 
poems 


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